All the news, all the time, in many of the languages. An interesting and ambitious project.
I have written quite a bit about GDELT (the Global Database of Events, Languages and Tone) over the past year, because I think it’s a great example of the type of ambitious project only made possible by the advent of cloud computing and big data systems. In a nutshell, it’s database of more than 250 million socioeconomic and geopolitical events and their metadata dating back to 1979, all stored (now) in Google’s cloud and available to analyze for free via Google BigQuery or custom-built applications.
On Thursday, version 2.0 of GDELT was unveiled, complete with a slew of new features — faster updates, sentiment analysis, images, a more-expansive knowledge graph and, most importantly, real-time translation across 65 different languages. That’s 98.4 percent of the non-English content GDELT monitors. Because you can’t really have a global database, or expect to get a full picture of what’s happening around world, if you’re limited to English…
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Categories: Hackers
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